Berserk
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[Listen up, Brendan and Craig! 8)]
THE PREEXISTENCE OF THE SOUL IN SCRIPTURE
[B-man:] "What were we BEFORE [birth] then? Presumably something LESS EVOLVED than humans. An `animal' perhaps...So people who get screwed in this life are paying for something they did as a MONKEY (or the equivalent thereof in `another dimension?'" ___________________
Brendan, you continually create false caricatures of Christianity in a desperate effort to duck the real issues. Your assumption of moral accountability to a prior monkey-like existence is unbiblical and just plain silly. It is refuted by Jeffrey Wands' paranormal encounter with his unborn son.
Jeff Wands, author of "The Psychic in You," was George Noory's guest on "Coast to Coast" a few nights ago. He shared this fascinating incident involving his son. During his wife's pregnancy, she and Jeff were watching the movie, "The Right Stuff." Jeff remarked that it would be wonderful if their newborn son would grow up to be an astronaut. One day Jeff's son announced that while he was in his mother's womb, he observed his parents watching that movie and recalled his Dad's wish that he grow up to be an astronaut! Jeff had never expressed this wish since. Obviously the son's preincarnate self expressed an intelligence that is more human than animal.
Is Jeff Wands' experience incompatible with biblical teaching? Not at all! Most Christian pastors are unaware that the Bible implies the preexistence of the soul. This doctrine may supply another key to our grasp of seemingly unfair suffering. This point can be illustrated by Betty Eade's NDE:
"I saw how desirous these [mature] spirits were of coming to earth. They looked on life here as a school where they could learn many things and develop the attributes they lacked. I was told that ...we had actually chosen many of our weaknesses and difficult situations in our lives so that we could grow ("Embraced by the Light", 89-90)."
But like Swedenborg, Betty is warned against a reincarnational spin on these revelations. She is told in her NDE: "I also learned that we do not have repeated lives on this earth (93)." Since the Bible does not teach reincarnation, her revelation brings her NDE into line with biblical revelation:
"As Jesus went along, He saw a man blind from birth. His disciples asked Him, `Rabbi, Who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?' `Neither this man nor his parents sinned,' replied Jesus, `but this happened so that the work of God might be displayed in his life (John 9:1-2).'"
Notice that it is Jesus' disciples--not His opponents--who pose this question. Their question assumes that the blind man might have sinned during his prebirth existence and implies that our pain in this life may be a function of preincarnational mistakes. Conversely, our special purpose in this life may be a function of our preincarnational service: e. g.
"The word of the Lord came to me, saying, `Before I formed you in the womb, I KNEW YOU, before you were born, I set you apart; I appointed you a prophet to the nations (Jeremiah 1:5)."
The wording here seems to imply not just divine foreknowledge, but the soul's preexistence. The demonstration of moral goodness prior to birth can lead to a "happy disposition" in this life:
"I was a boy of happy disposition. I had received a good soul as my lot; or rather, being good, I had entered an undefiled body (Wisdom of Solomon 8:19-20)."
The Catholic Old Testament contains the Wisdom of Solomon. Its teaching about the preexistence of the soul makes me wonder about the contrary traditional Catholic teaching that the soul is instead created at conception.
None of these texts specify when human souls are created. But one ancient Jewish text claims that all souls were created prior to the earth's creation:
"All souls are prepared for eternity before the formation of the earth (2 Enoch 23:5)."
Similarly, Origen (c. 225 AD) taught that we all preexisted and inhabited countless worlds clothed in bodies appropriate to each world. This church father also rejects reincarnation, but lends some credibility to the potential relevance of prior lives in helping solve the mystery of suffering.
[B-man:] "I want to keep rejecting what I got wrong or what went wrong. If `you only go around once,' then you have to accept leaving certain `unfinished business.'" ________________________
Duh, uou criticize me without closely reading anything I say! So I must repeat myself. NDEs indicate that we will all be subjected to an comprehensive past life review in which we will not only be forced to relive our past sins, but also to experience the devastating emotional impact of our misdeeds from the perspeptive of those we vcitimized. So in the afterlife, your "business" will not be left "unfinished.". Also, you will find yourself in a spirit plane based on the principle like attracts like, probably with no chance of concealing your thoughts from others. If that predicament results is a Hell, that Hell is self-chosen as a way of teaching you your current level of spiritual development. But according to Scripture, God's love never permanently abandons anyone after death. So you can always choose a more godly and loving path. Or you can choose annihilation!
[B-man:] "Are `spiritual things' really more enjoyable than arranging the sock drawer or mowing the lawn?" ________________
You remind me of a sexually insecure guy who has never had good sex with a gorgeous woman. So he rationalizes this sad fact by claiming that sex can never be an enjoyable experience. You have repeatedly been exposed to astral reports about the bliss of astral sex and the earthlike delights of the heavens. Yet you prefer to put your head in the sand and seek the cocoon of annihilation. You refuse to read any books on spirituality that might transform your life and you refuse to meet the minimal conditions for an experience of God's love and grace. No wonder you loathe the Christian fundamentalists in your extended family. You have a fundamentalist mentality in agnostic clothing. You are a poster boy for psychological projection--the tendency to project what we unconsciously dislike about ourselves on to others who unconsciously remind of us our ourselves.
I challenge you to actually try to have a spiritual experience. You've been posting on this site for a long time now. Why not buy Bruce's latest how-to book and practice with it? I intend to do that myself if my Gateway CDs and my current practice with Robert Bruce's detailed astral technology continually fail to produce results.
[Craig:] "If god interfered with Joseph to change human events, doesn't that mean he's interfering with the free will of many humans?" ____________________________
No, Joseph's brothers imprisoned him in a well and planned to kill him later. But God arranged for an alternative: Midianite slave traders who could take him for a handsome fee. Also God blessed Joseph with the gift of precognitve dream interpretation. which allowed him to anticipate the devastating famine that would soon ravage the Middle East.. Joseph's gift ingratiated him with the Pharoah and led to his rise to power so that he could store up food and grain for the coming crisis.
Still, your question has merit, Craig. Sin can enslave people to certain obsessions or addictions (e. g. heroine). According to the Bible, God can occasionally use our obsessions and addictions to accomplish His purpose. But such divine interventions do not interfere with our freedom in the grand scheme of thiings.
[Craig:] "Right action is...based on rules which the rest of society oges by...What stops you from raping and pillaging? Society does--peer pressure--simple advantage of numbers...Evolution has programed us with accountability." _________________________
You keep overlooking the basic issue of ethics: How do you get an "ought" out of an "is"? Put differently, why "ought" I to care about the demands of social rules, peer pressure, or a conscience shaped by evolution? You might reply, "Because society will punish your violations." That reply is pragmatic, not moral. What if I enjoy raping and pillaging and am smart enough to get away with it? You might urge me to listen to my conscience. But a conscience can be seared and reprogramed once the arbitrary nature of evolution is recognized. You might respond: "But suppose everyone reaped and pillaged? That would make human life a living Hell!" True, but most people will not follow my outrageous example; that hypothetical is irrelevant to my real life experience.
But suppose that there is an afterlife. Suppose further that advancement from unpleasant planes to joyful planes depends on mastery of certain moral principles and spiritual truths. Then those principles and truths automatically serve as a basis for morality and allow us to derive an "ought" out of an "is." Iris Murdoch, an Oxford atheistic philosopher, wisely confessed: "If there is no God, it will be necessary to invent Him." Otherwise, morality lacks objective grounding and is meaningless.
Don
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